Zaner Daily Precious Metals Commentary
Thursday, March 6, 2025Gold consolidates ahead of NFP. Silver remains supported by German spending bazooka.
OUTSIDE MARKET DEVELOPMENTS: The ECB cut its deposit rate by 25 bps to a more than two-year low of 2.5%, in line with expectations. In the policy statement, the ECB acknowledged that "monetary policy is becoming meaningfully less restrictive."
Growth forecasts were trimmed to 0.9% for 2025, 1.2% for 2026, and 1.3% for 2027. "The downward revisions for 2025 and 2026 reflect lower exports and ongoing weakness in investment, in part originating from high trade policy uncertainty as well as broader policy uncertainty."
During her presser, ECB President Lagarde avoided directly responding to questions about a potential pause, saying that the central bank must be "agile in response to the data."
Despite today's easing, German bund yields continue to soar, dragging other long rates along for the ride. On Wednesday, German yields rose the most since reunification in 1990.
Germany's new incoming government revealed plans to significantly loosen the "debt brake" to allow for a massive increase in infrastructure and defense spending. The presumed next chancellor of Friedrich Merz's 'whatever it takes' plan "allows for potentially unlimited borrowing for defence spending and creates a €500bn 10-year fund to drive infrastructure investments," according to the FT.
The euro has benefited from surging bund yields, pushing the dollar index to another four-month low. Increasingly dovish Fed expectations are adding additional weight to the greenback.
Ongoing angst about tariffs and the implications for inflation are contributing to the bond market turmoil. The White House has delayed some tariffs until April 2, when sweeping reciprocal tariffs are slated to take effect.
The constantly shifting policy is driving uncertainty and risk aversion. Yet, there still seems to be some hope for a comprehensive trade deal with Mexico and Canada. Meanwhile, China threatened that it was ready to fight “any type of war” with the U.S.
Challenger Layoffs surged to a nearly five-year high of 172.0k in February versus 49.8k in January. "With the impact of the Department of Government Efficiency actions, as well as canceled government contracts, fear of trade wars, and bankruptcies, job cuts soared in February," said Andrew Challenger.
Trade Balance exploded to a record-wide deficit of -$131.4 bln in January, outside expectations of -$123.0 bln, versus a revised -$98.1 bln in December.
Initial Jobless Claims fell 21k to 221k in the week ended 1-Mar, below expectations of 232k, versus 242k in the previous week. Continuing claims jumped 42k to 1,897k in the 22-Feb week from 1,855k.
Q4 Productivity was revised up to 1.5%, versus a 1.2% advance reading and a revised 2.9% in Q3. ULCs were revised down to 2.2% from 3.0%, versus -1.5% in Q3.
Wholesale Sales tumbled 1.3% in January, well below expectations of +3.0%, versus a positive revised +1.4% in December (was +1.0%). Inventories rebounded 0.8% after a 0.4% decline in December.
GOLD
OVERNIGHT CHANGE THROUGH 6:00 AM CST: -$13.35 (-0.46%)
5-Day Change: +$40.90 (+1.42%)
YTD Range: $2,607.16 - $2,955.40
52-Week Range: $2,145.06 - $2,955.40
Weighted Alpha: +33.96
Gold is consolidating around the 20-day moving average as the market looks ahead to tomorrow's U.S. jobs data. The yellow metal continues to garner support from haven interest and a weaker dollar.
Downticks below $2,900 have attracted buying interest, but further serious attacks on the upside are unlikely until the NFP report is behind us. The ADP survey and today's Challenger report suggest there are downside risks for NFP.
A significant payrolls miss would continue to bolster dovish Fed expectations. Right now, Fed funds futures favor a rate cut in June, with two additional cuts by year-end.
Massive gold inflows to the U.S. in recent months contributed to the blowout in the trade deficit. However, as noted in yesterday's commentary, the market dislocation associated with these flows appears to be easing.
Gold lease rates have fallen significantly, and the contango between spot and front-month futures continues to moderate. Short covering in the futures market played a role in gains this week.
Chart/Fibonacci resistance at $2,928.75/29.68 is the trigger for a retest of last week's record high at $2.955.40. Beyond that, $3,000 remains a valid objective.
The low from European trading at $2,893.31 is now the intervening barrier ahead of Tuesday's low at $2,883.58. Keep an eye on the 20-day MA at $2,909.75 on a close basis.
OVERNIGHT CHANGE THROUGH 6:00 AM CST: -$0.208 (-0.64%)
5-Day Change: +$1.457 (+4.66%)
YTD Range: $28.946 - $33.340
52-Week Range: $24.024 - $34.853
Weighted Alpha: +30.61
Silver is trading higher for a fourth session, boosted by Germany's "whatever it takes" borrow and spend plans, further pledges of stimulus from Beijing, and a weaker dollar. The white metal has set new two-week highs, bringing the $33 level back within striking distance.
A sustained push back above $33 seems unlikely ahead of the jobs report. Silver made several forays above $33 in February but was unable to notch a close with the 33-handle.
A close above $33 would bode well for a retest of the February highs at $33.34. An eventual breach of this level would return focus to last year's cycle high at $34.853.
Signs of weakness in the U.S. labor market would temper some of the German-inspired enthusiasm and could lead to a retreat into the range. Today's overseas low at $32.306 protects the 20-day MA at $32.167. Additional tiers of support are noted at $31.809 and $31.517.
Peter A. Grant
Vice President, Senior Metals Strategist
Zaner Metals LLC
312-549-9986 Direct/Text
[email protected]
www.zanermetals.com
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